RE:RE:RE:RE:More good newsExactly that is and was my point. But because the valuation of the company touched almost a billion, he perhaps thought himself as a genious and hence entitled to do whatever he liked, only to find out in a harry that this valuation dropped to less than 150million when almost all the funds exited the stock. Arrogance and hubris go hand in hand with wealth and privilege, nothing secret about that. After all in a bull market everyone is a genious, as the saying goes. But in a downturn, there is close scrutiny of everything related to the stock. I never saw so much scrutiny and debate on a stock as CRH when the stock dived. This scrutiny and debate should have taken place when the stock was going up not down. But human nature being what it is, in good times no one wants to find the truth about anything, till disaster strikes, and then everyone is looking for answers. GL